I have been blogging here at Everything Rum since 2007. My first posting was a Consciousness Riff. I used to blog at Outside Walls, mostly on Kosovo, but closed that down a while ago. In the Everything Rum space I've blogged on quantum physics, cosmology & space/time, biking, the state of the world, capitalism, the Articles of Confederation and sometimes on politics. State Department cables (cleared through FOIA) and other related material from my time serving as a US diplomat can be found at Real Diplomacy. Since 2009, I was writing on international issues at TransConflict.
Now I am branching out. I've tried Twitter and Facebook in the past but didn't stay with them. I'm now returning to Twitter to connect and to accompany my expanded blogging here. I'll be commenting as I see useful and perhaps will find others who if not in agreement at least have some reason to stop and reflect. My first effort will follow shortly on the US and Russia.
Ruminations on everything from international affairs and politics to quantum physics, cosmology and consciousness. More recently, notes on political theory.
Thursday, January 28, 2016
Branching Out
Labels:
blogging,
commentary,
communication,
decoherence,
enchantment,
entanglement,
existence,
ghosts,
gods,
life,
possibilianism,
singularity,
thinking,
toilets,
Twitter
Saturday, November 28, 2015
Non-local spookiness
Einstein
put forward his theory of general
relativity 100 years ago. His prime insight
concerned the reciprocal relationship between mass and spacetime.
Mass (matter and energy) warps spacetime (our three observed
physical dimensions plus time) and warped spacetime determines how
objects move around mass. Mass in motion always moves in straight
lines. However, in the presence of massive objects, those straight
lines follow the curves of warped spacetime. Thus things fall.
Einstein
also contributed to the elaboration of quantum
mechanics. But quantum
physics and relativity
seem to be fundamentally different ways of understanding reality.
The former reduces all we observe to a realm of particles and waves
that remain intrinsically probabilistic. The latter places reality
into a universal geometrical framework of space and time. Einstein
was uncomfortable with quantum physics because of its probabilistic
nature – “God does not play dice with the universe” – and
because until observed, particles also exist as waves. A further
issue for Einstein was the apparent implication of quantum physics
known as entanglement.
Quantum
entanglement occurs when two or more particles
are generated or interact in such a way that they share the same wave
function (quantum state). When that happens,
no matter how far apart those particles may move away from each other
– even to opposite ends of the universe – they remain entangled:
measurement of one – collapsing its wave function – also
determines the measurement of the other. This bothered Einstein –
he termed it “spooky action at a distance” – because the two
particles seem to communicate through space instantaneously and –
more to the point – faster than the speed of light. For Einstein,
the speed of light is a fundamental constant and nothing can go any
faster. But experiment has consistently verified the phenomenon of
quantum entanglement. Most recently a group of Dutch
physicists gave what is widely seen as
definitive proof that entanglement across distance is real and
reveals that reality is in some way non-local.
Non-locality
implies that entangled things exist in a relationship that is not
determined by the local conditions that impinge upon those things.
In other words, when one of the things is measured, the qualities of
the far distant formerly entangled thing are not determined by where
that thing is but by some deeper reality that is not local to the
thing itself. Non-locality implies that there is some more
fundamental level of reality that exists outside space and time.
We
live in a universe in which time and space do exist. We travel
through space (in any direction of three directions) and time (only
forward). Things with mass travel travel no faster than the speed of
light. At the speed of light, everything
happens at the same instant because time does
not pass. If we could be that massless surfer riding a photon
created at the moment of the Big Bang, we would experience everything
and everywhere that photon would ever be at the same instant.
We
experience time as passing because we live in a world of matter and
energy, which seems to give rise to spacetime. Our consciousness
exists in time as our body exists in space.
But non-locality points to a reality in which the universe exists
without time or space as one object in which all time and space exist
at once. We appear not to experience this deeper reality outside the
realm of quantum experimentation (though it may make it possible
someday to have quantum
computing). But non-locality – as St. Thomas
Aquinas might argue – points to consideration of First Cause and
Ultimate Reality. That is spooky.
Labels:
Big Bang,
consciousness,
cosmology,
Einstein,
entanglement,
existence,
matter,
quantum physics,
reality,
reason,
relativity,
science,
universe
Saturday, June 27, 2015
Decoherence, or If a Tree Falls In the Forest...?
One of the basic
unsettled questions of quantum physics is why we
don't see quantum superposition in everyday objects. At the
quantum level – and before being “measured” – mass and energy
exist simultaneously as both wave and particle. The classic examples
are light and electrons. Photons exist as both wave and particle and
manifest as either depending
on how it is observed. Similarly, electrons do not exist, in
reality, as tiny “planets” circling the nucleus in neat orbits
but in clouds of probabilities that may be “found” as a particle
in a particular “place” only when measured. Everything that
exists at the quantum level – the realm of the very tiny – shares
this dual nature as wave and particle. It can be more accurately
described as a wave
function.
If everything were
to remain in quantum superposition in the macro-world we inhabit,
Schrödinger's
cat – and everyone else's – would be both alive and dead at
the same time. We don't see in that way because superposition seems
to breakdown when things get large. The wave function has collapsed
and we see either waves or
particles, i.e., individual, unconnected, single state things.
Why?
The easiest answer
might be that we don't see quantum superposition at the macro level
because when we look at the world, we as conscious
observers collapse the wave function. Light, sound, touch,
smell, taste all enter our perceptual mechanisms and, interacting
with brain and mind, are perceived. The world is there when we
observe it because the act of observation collapses the wave
functions around us even if nothing else did. But does this mean
that if
a tree falls in a forest with no one there to hear it, it doesn't
make a sound?
One answer might be
yes, the unobserved falling tree makes no sound. The basic
reality of the universe may be thought of as one all-inclusive
wave function in which everything is entangled. The universe is
one big cloud of probabilities. Nothing exists per se until
observed. But that verges on solipsism.
So, science has considered a variety of other mechanisms for
decoherence of quantum superposition – collapsing the wave
function of anything tiny before it can get very big. It may happen
simply because as things get bigger, they get more complex. They
interfere with each other, fall out of phase, or vibrate at different
frequencies. The latest
theory posits that as
mass slows down – dilates – time, even the gravity of earth
would be enough to pull entangled particles into different time
streams.
But at least some
aspects of the macro-world do work through quantum effects. The
efficiency
of photosynthesis arises from quantum mechanical effects.
Quantum mechanics may explain how
birds use magnetic fields to navigate and our sense of smell. It
may be that the cosmos is an entangled universal wave function that
decoheres only at the boundary of individual acts of “observation.”
But the observers would not simply be conscious human beings but any
living thing interacting with its environment? Might the definition
of life
be that which breaks wave functions?
Labels:
consciousness,
cosmology,
decoherence,
entanglement,
existence,
life,
photosynthesis,
quantum physics,
reality,
science
Saturday, June 20, 2015
Gravity, Mass and Time II
I
recently noted that mass,
gravity and time may be essential features – givens – of our
universe, that gravity is something that slows time and that at the
speed of light, time stops. Actually time doesn't stop at the speed
of light but becomes instantaneous. At that speed, everything
happens at once. It's at an event horizon that time actually just
stops passing. As whatever it is that is “falling” into a black
hole passes the event horizon, the time that it may be experiencing
cannot escape. Beyond that, at the singularity, anything/everything
disappears from this universe (leaving aside the mechanism by which
black holes “evaporate”
over time). The mass and energy falling into the singularity is
converted into the very warping of space that is the black hole.
How
long does it take to fall from the event horizon into the
singularity? Has time there stopped or has it become instantaneous?
Apparently, if you could survive passing through the event horizon,
you would still experience
your own personal time. The length of time you'd experience
would be very short but it would pass. As under general relativity
there is no absolute standard of time, that would be all that counts
for you. Indeed, time may be thought of as something entirely a
matter of perspective. As I would be falling through the event
horizon experiencing my own usual passage of time – it would not
slow down or stop – it would appear to be doing so only to an
outside observer experiencing his own usual passage of time.
Our
human sense of the passage of time may be an entirely arbitrary
experience defined by our nature as biological mechanisms (with mass)
operating according to physical laws as elaborated by the evolution
of life on our particular planet. One defining process may be the
rate at which ribosomes add amino acids to the protein it is building
(called translation).
In all life on earth this process proceeds at the same speed of
10-20 additions per second. A “second” is a human unit of time
but not
an entirely arbitrary one as at the most fundamental level it is
related to two apparent givens: the ability of our consciousness to
hold just 2-3 seconds as our now and the existence of a basic
unit – the Planck time – of 5.39x10 to the -44th
seconds. Or perhaps we might simply say that our human, species
experience of time is one heart beat. That, however, might speed up
a bit as we crossed the horizon.
Labels:
consciousness,
cosmology,
existence,
humans,
life,
Planck,
reality,
relativity,
science,
singularity,
time
Thursday, June 4, 2015
Light tricks: The Delayed Choice Experiment
Physical Review A reports a recent "experimental observation of simultaneous wave and particle behavior in a narrowband single-photon wave packet." This is also covered in a more accessible form in Science News. The experiment is a variation on the delayed choice model that submits a photon to being observed (measured) after it has already been through a double beam splitter setup. This essentially is a way of forcing the photon to behave first as a particle (by passing it through a beam splitter) and then after having made that "choice" having it behave like a wave again, as predicted by quantum physics. The recent experiment takes this one step further by first stretching out a single photon so that it takes a small but measurable period of time to pass through the second beam splitter. With the splitter in place, the photon acts like a wave. With it removed while the photon is still passing through it, the photon manifests as a particle. The very same photon during one single act of observation -- in two parts -- is both particle and wave. This does not violate quantum physics but, as a scientist quoted by Science News suggests: "‘Wave’ and ‘particle’ are just words. In quantum physics, those words are imprecise at best."
This beautifully done experiment offers a window into the nature of not only light but the universe. As noted before, at the speed of light, time does not exist. Therefore, every photon is everywhere it will ever be at the same instant. The speed of light measures the degree of departure of our existence as mass affected by gravity from that cosmic external moment in which light exists. When we measure light we seek to capture in time that which exists without time. Wave and particle are the way we perceive its timeless nature as we move at our own pace through time and space.
This beautifully done experiment offers a window into the nature of not only light but the universe. As noted before, at the speed of light, time does not exist. Therefore, every photon is everywhere it will ever be at the same instant. The speed of light measures the degree of departure of our existence as mass affected by gravity from that cosmic external moment in which light exists. When we measure light we seek to capture in time that which exists without time. Wave and particle are the way we perceive its timeless nature as we move at our own pace through time and space.
Monday, May 25, 2015
What does the Turing Test test?
Saw the movie Ex
Machina. The outside shots, filmed in Valldalen,
Norway, are are simply gorgeous. Good flick and provoked some
ruminating (avoiding plot details).
There seems no a
priori reason to suppose that machine intelligence cannot reach
the point of passing the Turing
test. A complex enough programed machine able to “learn”
from extracting patterns from massive data and using them to interact
with humans should be able to “exhibit intelligent behavior
equivalent to, or indistinguishable from, that of a human.” One
can imagine such a machine as pictured in the movie.
But what does the
Turing test really test. An “artificial intelligence” might be
able to interpret and respond to the full range of human behavior and
simulate the same. It might be able to “read” a conscious human
better than an actual human might by picking up on subtle physical
manifestations (as stored in its memory). With a large enough data
base behind it and a multitude of “learned” behaviors it might
convince a human that it was indeed intelligent and even self-aware.
But would it be? Would the ability to simulate human behavior
completely enough to appear human actually be human or entail
consciousness? If programed with a sub-routine causing it to seek to
persist (i.e., resist termination), would it be a self seeking
self-preservation? Would programing allowing it to read human
emotions and respond “appropriately” with simulated emotion mean
it actually felt such emotions?
Would a machine
intelligence able to simulate human behavior and emotions actually be
able to love, hate, feel empathy and act with an awareness of itself
and, perhaps more importantly, of an Other? Or might there still be
something missing?
Smoked a cigar on my
favorite bench while considering all this and watched some ants going
about their business. Ants are extremely complex biological machines
acting and reacting within their environment with purpose and an
overall drive to self-perpetuate (both as individuals and as a
collective). They may be conscious even if not self aware. Or is a
certain basic self-awareness something that goes with being alive?
Would even a very complex machine ever be alive even if very
“intelligent?”
My guess is that
machine intelligence – even if very complex and advanced and
equipped with a self-referential sub-program allowing algorithmic
analysis of itself – would not be conscious or alive. Thus not
capable of emotion and therefore what we might call coldly
rational. Is this why Bill
Gates, Stephen
Hawking and others are concerned about AI?
Tuesday, May 19, 2015
Gravity, Mass and Time
Recently finished
physicist Kip Thorne's
The
Science of Interstellar about
his work to make the movie as scientifically grounded as possible.
While written for the interested layperson, some of it was hard to
follow. But it provided a lot of food for ruminating about the deep
connections between gravity, mass, time and the speed of light.
At
the speed of light, time
stops. Anything with mass that reached the speed of light also
achieves infinite mass. (This is one good reason to believe that
nothing with mass can go that fast. Anything of infinite mass
would need a great deal of thrust to keep going, indeed, an infinite
amount.) Photons have no mass and thus they gain no mass. Anything
– some ghost
without a machine – traveling with that photon at 186,000 MPS
would
also be timeless and thus everywhere that photon will ever
be all at once.
Time
also stops with an infinite mass that is not going anywhere, at a black hole.
Gravity slows time. At the event horizon of a black hole, spacetime
is so warped that nothing can escape upwards – not time, not space,
not matter, not light – but falls down into the black hole until it
reaches
the singularity at the “bottom.” While the black hole may have a
certain mass – the mass left over from the collapse of the star
that formed it – the singularity itself has the equivalent of
infinite mass. Anyone watching a friend drop into a black hole would
never see him or her actually fall all the way past the event
horizon. From the outside, the friend would be seen
moving ever slower. At some
point, a second to the falling friend might be, for example, a
billion years to the outside observer.
Not
just black holes slow time. Anything with mass does, including
earth. Einstein's theory of relativity predicts this. And indeed,
time on the GPS satellites (orbiting over 16 thousand miles up) run
some 45,900 nano seconds slower per day than clocks on earth. The
stronger
the gravity, the slower time goes compared to places of less gravity.
Mass
warps spacetime and achieves that effect through gravity. We don't
understand where gravity comes from and it does not fit into the
Standard Theory of quantum physics. Relativity seems to describe the
effects
of gravity but neither meshes with the Standard Theory nor explains
from whence gravity comes. String theory has been the Standard
Model's framework to incorporate relativity
as quantum gravity. To do
so, it would require extra
dimensions beyond the four we observe (three space and time). But
recent experiments have found no
supporting evidence for the simplest forms of such theories.
It
may be that mass, gravity, and time are just givens. Gravity
is something that slows time. At the speed of light, time stops.
Our experience of time – our
consciousness – seems
related to the
speed of light. Mass
keeps us from exceeding the speed of light. Random?
Labels:
Aquinas,
being,
consciousness,
cosmology,
Einstein,
existence,
gravity,
Interstellar,
light,
quantum physics,
relativity,
science,
string theory,
time,
universe
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